IMPORTANT NOTE: These are the archived stories for Belmont News & Achievements prior to June 26, 2023. To see current stories, click here.

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Barrett Earns Greathouse Physical Therapy Scholarship

Ashley BarrettAshley Barrett is the 2014-15 recipient of the David G. Greathouse Physical Therapy Scholarship.  The award is designated for a rising third-year physical therapy student who demonstrates leadership, scholarship and exemplary clinical performance within the program and who has a minimum grade point average of 3.7.

From 1996-2005,  Greathouse served as the founding chair and associate dean of the Belmont University School of Physical Therapy.  He now serves as director of clinical electrophysiology services at Texas Physical Therapy Specialists in New Braunfels, Texas.

Barrett joins four previous recipients of the Greathouse Scholarship: Ashley Campbell in 2010-11, Megan Tisdale in 2011-12, Stacey Lindsley in 2012-13 and Jordan Floyd in 2013-14.  She was featured earlier this year in a story about building a ramp for a physical therapy patient.

Al-Shamma Presents at Theatre Higher Education Conference

Jim Al-ShammaDr. Jim Al-Shamma, assistant professor of theatre, facilitated a panel on Arabic and Arab-American Theatre at the Association for Theatre in Higher Education (ATHE) Annual Conference in Scottsdale, Arizona, on July 26. As part of the panel, he presented a paper titled, “Collective Trauma and the Great Good Place: Saadallah Wannous’s ‘The Glass Café.’” In the paper, he read the one-act play of the title, published in 1965, as a veiled depiction of a Syrian populace traumatized by repressive state policies.

Tough’s Work Featured on Television Show

dave toughDr. David Tough’s song “All Over The World” was featured on the television series “Rush” Season One, Episode Three, which aired on Aug. 7 on  the USA Network. The song also features Belmont alumnus Rowland Folensbee on vocals.

Pharmacy Faculty Engage in Leadership Development

Dr. Kinsley Kiningham
Dr. Kinsley Kiningham
Dr. Cathy Ficzere
Dr. Cathy Ficzere

Dr. Cathy Ficzere, associate professor and director of drug information services, and Dr. Kinsley Kiningham, College of Pharmacy assistant dean of student affairs, recently completed the 2014 Chairs and Academic Administrators Management Program (CAAMP). The Academy for Academic Leadership (AAL) held the 2014 Chairs and Academic Administrators Management Program (CAAMP) on July 17-19 at the Georgia Tech Conference Center in Atlanta, Georgia. CAAMP is a top-notch leadership and management course designed specifically for department chairs and academic administrators within colleges and schools of the health professions. Since its inception in 2009, over 250 administrative leaders from institutions over the country have participated in CAAMP. Participants developed their leadership abilities through assessments and through peer feedback and individualized, professional coaching. Sessions included learning to lead, managing new tasks and challenges, faculty performance and assessment, strategic planning and budgeting, conflict management, work-life balance, and legal issues in academia.

Summer 2014 Commencement Ceremony Set for Aug. 8

commencement 2014-122-LBelmont University will hold its summer 2014 commencement ceremony for graduate and undergraduate students at 7:30 p.m. Aug. 8 in the Curb Event Center.  Belmont will celebrate the graduation of a total of 218 students. During the graduation ceremony, 101 undergraduate, 83 master’s and 34 doctoral degrees will be conferred.

Dr. Robert C. Fisher, president of the University, will preside over the event. Dr. Kimberlee Daus, College of Sciences and Mathematics associate dean and chemistry professor, will present the commencement address. Daus is the 2014-2015 Chaney Distinguished Professor, a title awarded for her representation of the University’s vision to be a “premier teaching institution.”

Watch the graduation ceremony live by visiting www.belmont.edu during the ceremony and clicking the watch live link.

Nashville Mayor Speaks to Massey Graduate Students

Karl Dean - Massey TalkNashville Mayor Karl Dean spoke to Massey School of Business students on July 24 as part of Associate Professor of Management Charles Wainright’s organizational behavior and management course. Dean discussed successful leadership strategies, city planning and his perspective on developing the vision, mission, goals and strategic directions for his staff and other organizations.  He also  elaborated on his vision for the future of Nashville and what resources it may take to accomplish this vision.

Pinter’s Mathematics Article Published in Journal

mike pinterDr. Mike Pinter, teaching center director and professor of mathematics, has had a peer-reviewed article published this month in the Journal of Humanistic Mathematics, Volume 4, Issue 2, 2014. The article is entitled “How Do I Love Thee? Let Me Count the Ways for Syllabic Variation in Certain Poetic Forms.” Click here to read the article.

In the article, Pinter considers a connection between poetry and mathematics via the Dekaaz poetic form which is similar to haiku with its constrained syllable counts per line. He describes two different ways to count the number of possible Dekaaz variations, one using a binary framework and the other approaching the count as an “occupancy problem” that is studied in the Combinatorics course that he teaches. The counting methods described are generalized to also count variations of other poetic forms with syllable counts specified, including haiku. Pinter includes Dekaaz examples and suggests a method that can be used to randomly generate a Dekaaz variation.

Pharmacy Faculty Present at National AACP Meeting

Several faculty members from the College of Pharmacy made presentations at the annual meeting of the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy (AACP) held in Grapevine, Texas earlier this week.

Dr. Angela Hagan
Dr. Angela Hagan
Dr. Leigh Ann Bynum
Dr. Leigh Ann Bynum

Dr. Leigh Ann Bynum and Dr. Angela Hagan were co-presenters for a session titled “Curricular Approaches to Active Learning,” which demonstrated different ways in which active learning techniques have been incorporated into pharmacy curricula. Bynum and Hagan focused on the use of patient simulation technology in the classroom.

Dr. Scott Weston
Dr. Scott Weston
Dr. Hope Campbell
Dr. Hope Campbell

Dr. Scott Weston moderated the session which included presentations from two other pharmacy schools.  Dr. Weston is the incoming Chair of the AACP Curriculum special interest group and was recently appointed to the Editorial Review Board for the AACP Center for the Advancement of Pharmacy Education (CAPE).

Dr. Hagan also joined with Dr. Hope Campbell to speak at a session on “Reviving the Meaning and Perceptions of Being a Minority Faculty Member.”  In addition, Hagan and Campbell presented a poster titled “Where’s the Minority Representation? State of Affairs in Academic Pharmacy.”  Campbell is the incoming Chair of the AACP Minority Faculty special interest group.

Dr. Alisa Spinelli
Dr. Alisa Spinelli
Dr. Ashton Beggs
Dr. Ashton Beggs

Dr. Ashton Beggs presented a poster titled “Student Perceptions of Inter-Professional Collaboration through Geriatric Case Training.”  This poster was a report prepared by Beggs, who worked with faculty in the Meharry Consortium Geriatric Education Center, to produce a day-long training session for students in nursing, social work, physical therapy, dietetics, medicine and pharmacy. Beggs also made a poster presentation with Dr. Alisa Spinelli on “Student Preference for Traditional vs. Non-Traditional Presentation Modalities.”

Steil Co-Authored Articled on Interprofessional Learning Published

Dr. Condit SteilDr. Condit Steil, professor of pharmacy,  Dr. Mark Chirico, a former faculty member in the College of Pharmacy, and Dr. Richard Thompson,from Lipscomb University, have co-authored a manuscript accepted for print publication in August by Currents in Pharmacy Teaching and Learning.  The article describes the implementation and first two years of follow-up of a novel interprofessional program which includes the School of Medicine and the School of Nursing at Vanderbilt University, the Social Work Department at Tennessee State University, the College of Pharmacy at Lipscomb University and the College of Pharmacy at Belmont University.  The study suggests positive benefits, as well as some areas for improvement, of interprofessional students working together in experiential settings and provides a format for other institutions to follow.  Clicking here to read the article.

Beggs Presents Pharmacy Poster at Conference

Dr. Ashton Beggs
Dr. Ashton Beggs

Ashton E. Beggs, assistant professor in the College of Pharmacy, presented a college poster titled “Student Perceptions of Inter-Professional Collaboration through Geriatric Case Training” at the American Association of Colleges of Pharmacy meeting held July 26-30 in Grapevine, Texas. The poster is a report prepared by Beggs, who worked with faculty in the Meharry Consortium Geriatric Education Center, to produce a day long training session for students in nursing, social work, physical therapy, dietetics, medicine and pharmacy.